Literature DB >> 35041688

Twenty years of change in benthic communities across the Belizean Barrier Reef.

Catherine Alves1,2, Abel Valdivia3, Richard B Aronson4, Nadia Bood5, Karl D Castillo6, Courtney Cox3, Clare Fieseler7, Zachary Locklear8, Melanie McField9, Laura Mudge10,11, James Umbanhowar1,10, John F Bruno10.   

Abstract

Disease, storms, ocean warming, and pollution have caused the mass mortality of reef-building corals across the Caribbean over the last four decades. Subsequently, stony corals have been replaced by macroalgae, bacterial mats, and invertebrates including soft corals and sponges, causing changes to the functioning of Caribbean reef ecosystems. Here we describe changes in the absolute cover of benthic reef taxa, including corals, gorgonians, sponges, and algae, at 15 fore-reef sites (12-15m depth) across the Belizean Barrier Reef (BBR) from 1997 to 2016. We also tested whether Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), in which fishing was prohibited but likely still occurred, mitigated these changes. Additionally, we determined whether ocean-temperature anomalies (measured via satellite) or local human impacts (estimated using the Human Influence Index, HII) were related to changes in benthic community structure. We observed a reduction in the cover of reef-building corals, including the long-lived, massive corals Orbicella spp. (from 13 to 2%), and an increase in fleshy and corticated macroalgae across most sites. These and other changes to the benthic communities were unaffected by local protection. The covers of hard-coral taxa, including Acropora spp., Montastraea cavernosa, Orbicella spp., and Porites spp., were negatively related to the frequency of ocean-temperature anomalies. Only gorgonian cover was related, negatively, to our metric of the magnitude of local impacts (HII). Our results suggest that benthic communities along the BBR have experienced disturbances that are beyond the capacity of the current management structure to mitigate. We recommend that managers devote greater resources and capacity to enforcing and expanding existing marine protected areas and to mitigating local stressors, and most importantly, that government, industry, and the public act immediately to reduce global carbon emissions.

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35041688      PMCID: PMC8765652          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249155

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  55 in total

1.  Causes of coral reef degradation.

Authors:  Richard B Aronson; John F Bruno; William F Precht; Peter W Glynn; C Drew Harvell; Les Kaufman; Caroline S Rogers; Eugene A Shinn; John F Valentine
Journal:  Science       Date:  2003-11-28       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  The three screen doors: can marine "protected" areas be effective?

Authors:  Stephen C Jameson; Mark H Tupper; Jonathon M Ridley
Journal:  Mar Pollut Bull       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 5.553

3.  Long-term region-wide declines in Caribbean corals.

Authors:  Toby A Gardner; Isabelle M Côté; Jennifer A Gill; Alastair Grant; Andrew R Watkinson
Journal:  Science       Date:  2003-07-17       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 4.  Effects of terrestrial runoff on the ecology of corals and coral reefs: review and synthesis.

Authors:  Katharina E Fabricius
Journal:  Mar Pollut Bull       Date:  2004-12-09       Impact factor: 5.553

5.  Assessing evidence of phase shifts from coral to macroalgal dominance on coral reefs.

Authors:  John F Bruno; Hugh Sweatman; William F Precht; Elizabeth R Selig; Virginia G W Schutte
Journal:  Ecology       Date:  2009-06       Impact factor: 5.499

Review 6.  Coral reefs in the Anthropocene.

Authors:  Terry P Hughes; Michele L Barnes; David R Bellwood; Joshua E Cinner; Graeme S Cumming; Jeremy B C Jackson; Joanie Kleypas; Ingrid A van de Leemput; Janice M Lough; Tiffany H Morrison; Stephen R Palumbi; Egbert H van Nes; Marten Scheffer
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2017-05-31       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  Global gradients of coral exposure to environmental stresses and implications for local management.

Authors:  Joseph Maina; Tim R McClanahan; Valentijn Venus; Mebrahtu Ateweberhan; Joshua Madin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-08-10       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Mass coral bleaching in 2010 in the southern Caribbean.

Authors:  Jahson Berhane Alemu I; Ysharda Clement
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-06       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Coral reef degradation is not correlated with local human population density.

Authors:  John F Bruno; Abel Valdivia
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-07-20       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  Shifting baselines, local impacts, and global change on coral reefs.

Authors:  Nancy Knowlton; Jeremy B C Jackson
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 8.029

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  2 in total

1.  Stony coral tissue loss disease decimated Caribbean coral populations and reshaped reef functionality.

Authors:  Lorenzo Alvarez-Filip; F Javier González-Barrios; Esmeralda Pérez-Cervantes; Ana Molina-Hernández; Nuria Estrada-Saldívar
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2022-06-09

2.  Global change differentially modulates Caribbean coral physiology.

Authors:  Colleen B Bove; Sarah W Davies; Justin B Ries; James Umbanhowar; Bailey C Thomasson; Elizabeth B Farquhar; Jess A McCoppin; Karl D Castillo
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-09-02       Impact factor: 3.752

  2 in total

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